“The past few months have been incredibly tough, especially on the team of Hello. For that I’m incredibly sorry,” wrote its chief executive, James Proud.

Image copyrightHello

Image caption
Mr Proud was aged 22 when Sense launched in 2014

“Hello has been my whole life for five years, and I couldn’t have asked for a better group of people to have travelled with.”

The product had been on sale for $149.

Customers have been told that the company is “unsure” whether the online service that supports the hardware will continue to operate – it would need to be acquired by a third-party. But they can export their existing data.

Owners have also been advised to request refunds from shops they bought the devices from.

However, if they purchased the kit directly from Hello itself, they have been told there will be no way to get their money back.

According to the news site Axios, Hello had held “fire-sale talks” with the fitness tracker specialist Fitbit, but failed to reach a deal.

A source close to Hello said that the firm – along with some other hardware developers – had found it more difficult to raise funds in recent months.

Missed lifelines

Sense comprised:

an orb that monitored the owner’s bedroom

a clip that attached to their pillow

a mobile phone app

The equipment produced a unique score for the previous night’s sleep and aimed to wake the owner up at the best point in their sleep cycle.

It had gained voice controls in November, in its last major update.

Image copyrightKickstarter

Image caption
The Sense sleep monitor raised nearly as much on Kickstarter as the Oculus Rift virtual reality headset

Mr Proud – who was born in London – gave up plans to go to university to create the gadget and moved to California after receiving a grant from Peter Thiel, the Silicon Valley entrepreneur who co-created PayPal and now acts as an adviser to President Trump.

The Briton had originally planned to create a wearable sleep-tracking gadget.

But he switched focus to create a table-top device after deciding that this would make customers more likely to keep using it.

“We spend a third of our day [asleep],” he told the BBC in 2014, “It’s the most critical part of the day.”

He managed to attract money from other big name backers, including ex-Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo, Facebook’s virtual reality vice-president Hugo Barra and Spotify’s head of special projects, Shakil Khan.

“Kickstarter can give you a good basis to get your product off the ground and an awful lot of PR, but translating that into a successful commercial product is difficult,” said Ben Wood, from the CCS Insight tech consultancy.

“Going to the next level, finding more funding and getting backing – or a takeover offer – from a big company is often the lifeline that these companies need to keep going.”

The failure has not deterred another British entrepreneur currently using Kickstarter to raise funds for a new sleep-tracking device.

Image copyrightCircadia

Image caption
Circadia has developed both a table-top sleep tracker and a separate lamp